5 results on '"Newstead CG"'
Search Results
2. Extracellular fluid volume determined by bioelectric impedance and serum albumin in CAPD patients.
- Author
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Jones CH, Smye SW, Newstead CG, Will EJ, and Davison AM
- Subjects
- Adult, Aged, Albuminuria, Blood Volume physiology, Female, Humans, Male, Middle Aged, Electric Impedance, Extracellular Space metabolism, Peritoneal Dialysis, Continuous Ambulatory, Serum Albumin analysis
- Abstract
Aim: To investigate the relationship between serum albumin and extracellular fluid volume, as measured by multifrequency bioelectrical impedance, in stable patients treated by CAPD., Method: Fifty-nine stable CAPD patients were assessed. Serum albumin (bromocresol green) and CRP, age, dialysate to plasma (D/P) creatinine ratio, normalized protein catabolic rate (nPCR), daily urine and peritoneal protein losses, and extracellular fluid volume (Vecf) were measured in each patient. Vecf was calculated as a percentage of actual body weight (Vecf% ABW), of lean body mass derived from anthropometry (Vecf% LBM) and of total body water (Vecf% Vtbw). Comparisons between those with a normal serum albumin (> or = 37 g/l) and those with a low serum albumin (< 37 g/l) were made by Mann-Whitney U test. Correlations with serum albumin were sought by Pearson's test., Results: The D/P creatinine ratio, daily peritoneal and urine protein losses, and extracellular fluid volume (Vecf% LBM and Vecf% Vtbw) were all significantly greater in patients with serum albumin < 37 g/l as compared to those > or = 37 g/l; P < 0.05. Age, CRP, and nPCR were not different. Serum albumin was negatively correlated with Vecf% LBM, r = -0.25; P = 0.05, Vecf% Vtbw, r = -0.39; P = 0.002, and daily urinary albumin loss, r = -0.25, P = 0.06., Conclusion: Hypoalbuminaemia is partly dependent on subclinical overhydration in CAPD patients. Serum albumin is negatively correlated with increased extracellular fluid volume and the proportion of Vecf to Vtbw is increased in hypoalbuminaemic patients. Multifrequency bioelectrical impedance is able to identify these abnormalities.
- Published
- 1998
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
3. Assessment of nutritional status in CAPD patients: serum albumin is not a useful measure.
- Author
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Jones CH, Newstead CG, Will EJ, Smye SW, and Davison AM
- Subjects
- Adolescent, Adult, Aged, Body Mass Index, Cross-Sectional Studies, Female, Humans, Male, Middle Aged, Nutritional Status, Peritoneal Dialysis, Continuous Ambulatory, Serum Albumin analysis
- Abstract
Introduction: In CAPD patients serum albumin is frequently used as an index of nutritional status, although it is recognized that hypoalbuminaemia may be caused by many factors. We have further examined the relationship between serum albumin and nutrition., Methods: Nutritional status was assessed by biochemistry, anthropometry, mid-arm muscle circumference, muscle strength (hand grip and back), and lean body mass (from anthropometry, creatinine kinetics and bioimpedance) in a group of 76 stable CAPD patients. Correlations between biochemical and nutritional parameters were sought and data were compared between patient groups defined by serum albumin (> or = 37 vs < 37 g/l on two occasions 2 months apart) and separately according to subjective global assessment score (normal nutrition, A vs mild to moderate, B, and severe, C, malnutrition)., Results: In patients with a low SGA score, actual body weight, body mass index, mid-arm muscle circumference, lean body mass, subscapular skinfold thickness, hand grip strength (males and females) and iliac and triceps skinfold thicknesses and back strength (females only) were all significantly less than in patients with a normal SGA score. In contrast, none of these variables differed in either gender when patients were compared according to serum albumin. Serum albumin was correlated with serum creatinine (r = 0.45, P = 0.01), daily urine protein excretion (r = -0.42, P = 0.02) and uncorrected weekly creatinine clearance (r = -0.39) in females, but not with any index of body composition in either gender., Conclusion: Whilst SGA identified a patient group with significantly abnormal body mass, muscle mass and muscle strength, serum albumin did not. Serum albumin is not a useful marker of malnutrition in stable patients on CAPD.
- Published
- 1997
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
4. Estimation of total daily creatinine clearance in CAPD from serum creatinine concentration.
- Author
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Jones CH, Newstead CG, and Will EJ
- Subjects
- Adult, Age Factors, Aged, Body Weight, Creatinine blood, Creatinine urine, Female, Humans, Male, Middle Aged, Models, Theoretical, Multivariate Analysis, Patient Compliance, Predictive Value of Tests, Regression Analysis, Retrospective Studies, Sex Factors, Urine chemistry, Urine physiology, Creatinine metabolism, Peritoneal Dialysis, Continuous Ambulatory statistics & numerical data
- Abstract
Objective: To establish whether estimation of creatinine clearance (CrCl) from serum creatinine, gender, age, and weight might reduce the number of 24-hour urine and dialysate collections required to monitor adequacy of delivered dialysis on continuous ambulatory peritoneal dialysis (CAPD)., Design: Retrospective single-center study., Setting: University Hospital., Patients: Creatinine excretion and CrCl were measured in 187 24-hour urine and dialysate collections from 99 CAPD patients (55 male, 44 female). Multiple regression analysis was used to estimate creatinine excretion from age and weight in males and females. CrCl was derived and also calculated using the Cockcroft-Gault and Mitch-Walser formulas. Positive and negative predictive values for indicating adequacy of dialysis were determined., Results: Measured and derived CrCl were correlated (males: r = 0.85; females: r = 0.83; p < 0.001), but agreement was poor (95% limits of agreement: males, 26.05 to -25.75 L/wk; females, 37.47 to -19.49 L/wk). Taking the minimum acceptable CrCl as 60 L/week, the respective positive predictive values of the derived, Cockcroft, and Mitch methods in predicting underdialysis were 88%, 100%, and 100% in males and 88%, 88%, and 89% in females. Negative predictive values were 83%, 57%, and 53% in males and 53%, 48%, and 45% in females., Conclusion: A derived CrCl > 60 was not predictive of adequate dialysis. Because the detection of underdialysis is our objective, formal clearance studies should be performed in this group. A derived CrCl < 60 L/wk was predictive of underdialysis in males and females and an increase in dialysis dose without formal clearance measurements could be suggested in these patients. The use of this approach could allow an important reduction in the number of clearance studies required to monitor CAPD adequacy.
- Published
- 1997
5. Serum albumin and survival in CAPD patients: the implications of concentration trends over time.
- Author
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Jones CH, Newstead CG, Wills EJ, and Davison AM
- Subjects
- Adult, Biomarkers, Female, Humans, Male, Middle Aged, Regression Analysis, Survival Rate, Peritoneal Dialysis, Continuous Ambulatory, Serum Albumin analysis
- Abstract
Hypothesis: Trends in serum albumin concentration over time provide a better prediction of clinical outcome in CAPD patients than a single mean value., Methods: This was a retrospective review of outcome at 36 months in 225 adult CAPD patients. Mean serum albumin was determined for the first (SA1) and second (SA2) 6 months of treatment and patients grouped according to SA1 (group I, > 37; group II, 34-37; group III, < 34 g/l) and according to the change in serum albumin (delta SA) between the first and second 6 months (increased/static or decreased). Patient (PS) and technique (TS) survival were determined by Kaplan-Meier survival analysis. The effect of SA1 and delta SA on survival were determined in a multivariate Cox regression analysis model that included age and presence or absence of a systemic disease., Results: By SA1 group, PS and TS survival at 36 months were 94 and 76% (group I), 64 and 53% (group II) and 70 and 52% (group III). If delta SA increased/remained static, then SA1 did not predict PS (group I, 100%; group II, 96%; group III, 74%; P = n.s.) or TS (group I, 72%; group II, 63%; group III, 65%; P = n.s.). If delta SA decreased, PS was worse in groups II and III, both as compared to group I (PS group I, 88%; group II, 52%; group III, 34%; P = 0.02) and as compared to the groups II and III when delta SA increased (PS group II, 74 vs 52%, P = 0.05; group III, 82 vs 34%, P = 0.005) The same trend was seen for TS. In the multivariate Cox regression model, age, direction of change in serum albumin, and presence of a multisystem disease were significant predictors of survival, whereas SA1 was not., Conclusion: Early hypoalbuminaemia in CAPD only predicts a worse patient and technique survival if mean serum albumin decreases further from the first to second 6 months of dialysis therapy. Change in serum albumin between the first and second 6 months of CAPD and the mean serum albumin over the first 6 months together offer better discrimination of outcome than either alone.
- Published
- 1997
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
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